Search
Searching with a thematic focus on Environment, Environment and natural resource management
Showing 681-690 of 765 results
Pages
- Document
People and wildlife interactions around Serengeti National Park, Tanzania
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, 2003This report reviews the results from a survey study in communities adjacent to Serengeti National Park in Tanzania.DocumentGoverning the grasslands of Western China
Case Western Reserve University, 2003The paper begins by outlining Chinese grassland policy in the reform period and then describes key aspects of actual local level arrangements for grassland management. This description is based on the authors’ field studies at different sites on the Tibetan plateau (within Sichuan and Yunnan Province and the Tibetan Autonomous Region) and Xinjiang-Uygur Autonomous Region1.DocumentReview and analysis of specific Transboundary Natural Resource Management initiatives in the Southern African Region
World Conservation Union Regional Office for Southern Africa, 2001The authors of this paper intend to help clarify understanding of trans-boundary natural resource management (TBNRM) in southern Africa.DocumentBeyond Boundaries: Transboundary Natural Resource Management in Sub-Saharan Africa
Biodiversity Support Programme, 2001This publicaiton provides an overview of the background and current status of Transboundary Natural Resource Management (TBNRM) initiatives.DocumentA park for the people? Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park: community consultation in Coutada 16, Mozambique
Refugee Research Programme at the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits), 2002This paper reports on research on local knowledge of the establishment of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park in Mozambique.DocumentAIDS toolkits: HIV/AIDS and community based natural resource management
Health Economics & HIV/AIDS Research Division, University of Natal, 2002This toolkit is designed for ministries and other agencies that support CBNRM initiatives, defined as any community-led effort to foster productive and sustainable use of surrounding soil, water, forest, rangeland, wildlife, and fisheries resources.DocumentTransboundary conservation: the politics of ecological integrity in the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park
Sustainable Livelihoods in Southern Africa, 2003Recent years have witnessed the emergence of an ostensibly surprising coalition of interests around the notion of Transboundary Natural Resource Management (TBNRM) in Southern Africa.DocumentA critique of transboundary natural resource management in Southern Africa
World Conservation Union Regional Office for Southern Africa, 2002The meteoric rise of transboundary approaches is due to several factors, including the need to better manage shared resources; the drive for economic growth through regional integration and development; the need to promote peace and security; and more external factors such as globalization and the agendas of international donors and organizations.DocumentImproving water productivity: how do we get more crop from every drop?
International Water Management Institute, 2003This briefing demonstrates that agriculture currently consumes 70% of the world's developed fresh water supplies and that by improving the productivity of water used for agriculture by 40%, it is possible to reduce the amount of additional freshwater withdrawals needed to feed the world's growing population to 0. The briefing asks: what steps can policy makers take now?DocumentBuilding high-performance knowledge institutions for water management
International Water Management Institute, 2003This briefing argues that many Indian water management institutions are failing to live up to their original promise, failing to deliver high-value thinking, insights or perspectives. It demonstrates that by allowing these institutions to stagnate, there is a risk of a loss of a vitally important tool for research and policy making.Pages
